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The fight against anti-Semitism on college campuses must start by properly labeling Israel’s foes as purveyors of hate speech.
Critics of the Jewish state say they only want justice. But when Palestinians and their allies use that word, they mean something very different.
The British Labour Party offers a weak response to the BBC’s anti-Semitism investigation.
Assimilation is a daunting challenge for American Jews, but it doesn’t help when an Israeli rabbi/politician inappropriately compares the intermarried to the Six Million.
The contemporary expression of the oldest hatred didn’t start with Jeremy Corbyn, and it won’t end with him. It has been around for decades and is endemic in progressive circles, not just in Britain but throughout the West.
For the Palestinians attempting to rewrite the history of Israel’s capital city, the City of David is just one more thread in the large tapestry of denial of Jewish ties to Jerusalem.
Left-wing Jews continue to complain about CUFI, but at a time of rising anti-Semitism, these friends deserve thanks—not contempt rooted in prejudice.
The positive side to this story is that the country had some comic relief from the genuine clawing controversies of the day. Less amusing is arousing the wrath of the country’s more extreme religious elements.
For advocates of Israel and Zionism in the public square, there is only one question that matters when it comes to TIP’s demise: Is it a political defeat? My own answer is an unwavering no, it isn’t.
The twin issues of Iran and North Korea illustrate how the isolationist right and the universalist left march hand in hand.
Palestinians’ rights matter when targeted by Israel, but not when targeted by the Palestinian Authority. And Israeli rights never matter, except when violated by Israel.
The prime minister has continued to do what he has done for years: meeting with domestic and international leaders, working on diplomacy and keeping Israelis safe.